Stair injuries tend to spike in places where people move quickly between levels and where maintenance is easy to overlook—especially in multi-unit housing and neighborhood commercial areas.
In University Heights, common real-world scenarios include:
- Apartment and condo stairwells where handrails get loosened, lighting fails, or worn tread surfaces aren’t replaced.
- Shared entryways where debris, salt/ice residue tracked in during winter, or clutter on landings makes footing unpredictable.
- Workplaces and retail spaces where customers or staff carry packages, use dim back entrances, or encounter stairs that were recently cleaned but not adequately secured.
- Event-related traffic in nearby community settings, where visitors move between areas faster than residents do and rely on signage/lighting that may be inadequate.
When insurers see a “simple stumble,” they often try to minimize the case. The difference between a low offer and meaningful compensation is whether your lawyer can connect the hazard to the fall and the fall to the injuries.


